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So You Want To Be An Animator

So You Want To Be An Animator is a fun, colorful, and surprisingly detailed look at what it really means to work in animation. Written for kids ages 10–14, this illustrated nonfiction book goes way beyond “animators draw cartoons” and shows readers how much patience, skill, teamwork, and imagination are involved in bringing a character to life. From hand-drawn animation and flipbooks to 3D computer animation, character rigging, storyboarding, and digital tools, the book gives young readers a clear picture of the many steps between a sketch in a notebook and a finished scene on screen.

One of the best things about this book is how honest it is. Soules doesn’t make animation sound easy or magical. She explains the actual craft behind it, including timing, squash and stretch, anticipation, follow-through, and the careful observation of how things move in the real world. In the section labeled The Hardest Parts of the Job the author states, “Animation is extraordinarily time-consuming… a single second of fully drawn animation needs twenty-four separate drawings.” I didn’t consider this even as an adult. Kids who love drawing will likely find themselves looking at movement in a whole new way after reading this.

The book also does a great job showing that animation is a team effort. Animators work with directors, writers, sound designers, riggers, and many other artists to build a world that feels seamless to the audience. I appreciated that the book talks about the hard parts too, like the long hours of practice, the technical learning, and the patience it takes to create even a few seconds of finished animation. The exercises, glossary, suggested websites, organizations, and further reading make it feel practical, not just inspirational.

So You Want To Be An Animator is an encouraging and informative book for creative kids, especially those who are always sketching in the margins or pausing animated movies to study how characters move. It’s easy to understand without talking down to readers, and it’s interesting enough that adults may learn a few things too. I would highly recommend it to parents, teachers, and young artists who want a realistic but exciting look at animation as both an art form and a possible career.

Pages: 38 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0H1LHQWTL

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